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AUA 2012

American Urological Association (AUA)aua
2012 Annual Meeting

May 19 - 23, 2012
Georgia World Congress Center
Atlanta, GA USA

AUA 2012 - A closer look at PSA testing and prostate cancer: The screening debate, genetic connection and risk in young men - Press Release

ATLANTA, GA USA (PRESS RELEASE) - May 21, 2012  - Three new studies examining prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screenings and prostate cancer risk will be presented at the 107th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA).

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AUA 2012 - Perspectives from the AUA - PSA controversy: Do the harms exceed the benefits or the benefits exceed the harms? - Video statement from William J. Catalona, MD

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - On Tuesday, May 22, 2012, Dr. William J. Catalona spoke at the American Urological Association Annual Meeting in Atlanta about reactions to the recommendation by the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) that all PSA screening, in all men, of all ages, be discontinued.

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AUA 2012 - Perspectives from the AUA - PSA controversy: Do the harms exceed the benefits or the benefits exceed the harms? - A take-away message for urologists

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - The USPSTF recommendation to cease all PSA screening in all men of all ages was the buzz at AUA this week.

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AUA 2012 - Using social media to gauge reaction to the United States Preventive Services Task Force’s (USPSTF) report: Twitter as an investigative tool - Session Highlights

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - Twitter, a microblogging service with over 200 million users, has been used to predict stock market fluctuations, monitor disease spread, and foment political revolutions.

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AUA 2012 - Prostate cancer diagnosis in patients receiving unrelated urologic care: Overdiagnosis or appropriate care? - Poster

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - Presented by Corcoran AT, Smaldone MC, Egelston, BL, Simhan J, Chen DC, Viterbo R, Greenberg RE, Uzzo RG, and Kutikov A at the American Urological Association (AUA) Annual Meeting - May 19 - 23, 2012 - Georgia World Congress Center - Atlanta, GA USA

aua 2012 corcoran poster thumb

Department of Surgical Oncology, Division of Urologic Oncology, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA, USA

The lead author, Anthony T. Corcoran, MD, is a graduate of SUNY Downstate Medical School in Brooklyn and completed his residency in urology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. He is currently a fellow in urologic oncology at Fox Chase Cancer Center. He is interested in applying minimally invasive techniques to urologic oncology.


Funding by Department of Defense, Physician Research Training Award (AK); Fox Chase Kidney Cancer Keystone Program

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AUA 2012 - Male pattern baldness may be a predictor of prostate cancer - Press Release

ATLANTA, GA USA (PRESS RELEASE) - May 22, 2012 -

Severity of balding a possible risk factor for older men

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AUA 2012 - Evidence suggests statin use may slow prostate growth - Press Release

ATLANTA, GA USA (PRESS RELEASE) - May 21, 2012 - Statin use among men is associated with a modest reduction in prostate growth, according to a new study at the 107th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA).

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AUA 2012 - Androgen biosynthesis inhibition and metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer - Exclusive Interview

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - At this year's American Urological Association (AUA) Annual Meeting in Atlanta, Dr. Judd Moul presented a practice management perspective on the burden of metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), the mechanism of action for Zitiga® (abiraterone acetate), as well as phase III clinical evidence. He fielded nearly 30 minutes of questions from more than 400 participants. His AUA audio report recaps highlights and several key findings. The following are highlights from an interview with Dr. Moul based on his May 21, 2012, AUA Clinical Theater presentation

Background: In mCRPC, prostate tumor cells remain androgen-sensitive by several mechanisms and the new terminology of mCRPC aptly reflects the evidence that in mCRPC the tumor remains hormone sensitive. Abiraterone inhibits the CYP17 enzyme complex required for androgen biosynthesis in the testicular, adrenal, and prostatic tumor tissue.

Q: What are the key points clinicians should consider when using abiraterone acetate for the treatment metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) following treatment by docetaxel with prednisone?

Dr. Moul: As physicians use abiraterone acetate (market name Zytiga®) a couple of key points come up: How do you sequence this drug? At the current time, this drug is to be used after a patient has progressed on docetaxel- (Taxotere®) based chemotherapy. Then the question would come up, you start Zytiga and the patient has responded, how do you know when to discontinue this drug?

It’s important to point out for the clinician, In the clinical trial where Zytiga was FDA approved, the trial did not base the discontinuation on PSA alone. The patients had to have met three criteria for disease progression before abiraterone acetate was stopped. First, they had to have a 25% increase in their PSA levels over baseline when they started the drug. Second, they had to have radiographic progression (bone scan, CT scan or MRI had to show worsening of the disease). Third, they had to have symptomatic or clinical progression as defined by the physician.

From a urology standpoint we certainly know patients follow their PSA. We follow PSA and rely on PSA; however, we encourage doctors using this drug not to simply stop the drug solely based on PSA progression as well as educating our patients about how to define success and progression with this product.

Dr. Moul: In summary, key takeaway messages about abiraterone acetate are:

  • Abiraterone acetate inhibits CYP17, an enzyme complex needed for androgen biosynthesis, and when used in combination with prednisone improved the overall survival in patients with mCRPC who received prior chemotherapy containing docetaxel.
  • In the latest analysis of the clinical trial, there was a 4.6 month survival difference comparing Zytiga to prednisone alone. That is quite impressive considering these patients had all progressed after docetaxel. This is a very advanced, difficult patient population, yet Zytiga was improving the median survival by 4.6 months.
  • The safety profile (for abiraterone acetate) is quite tolerable and quite good. From a testing standpoint and a clinical management standpoint (during CYP17 inhibition, since the cortisol production is blocked) there is the potential for this drug to drive this pathway toward mineralocorticoid excess.
  • From a board exam and clinical management perspective, this drug can sometimes cause hypokalemia (low potassium), hypertension, or fluid retention. These are the three key side effects considered potentially unique based on the drug’s mechanism of action.”
This event was sponsored by Janssen Biotech, Inc. as a non-accredited AUA 2012 promotional activity.
 
 
 
 

 


aua moulJudd

Judd W. Moul, MD, FACS is the James H. Seamans, MD Professor of Surgery and Director of the Duke Prostate Center, Duke Cancer Institute and Division of Urology at the Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC. Prior to joining Duke, Dr. Moul was the professor of surgery at USUHS in Bethesda, MD, an attending urologic oncologist at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and a former director at the Center for Prostate Disease Research. Dr. Moul currently serves on the editorial boards of Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases, Prostate Cancer, BJU International, American Journal of Men’s Health, Brazilian Journal of Urology, and World Journal of Urology. He has authored over 500 medical and scientific manuscripts and book chapters and lectured at U.S. and International meetings.

 


Interview conducted at the American Urological Association (AUA) Annual Meeting- May 19 - 23, 2012 - Georgia World Congress Center - Atlanta, GA USA

 

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AUA 2012 - Group seminars are an effective and economic method of delivering patient information regarding radical prostatectomy and functional outcomes - Session Highlights

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - This is a ground breaking study, conducted in London, and presented at the AUA, evaluating the efficacy and economic benefits of a group intervention for surgical preparation.

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AUA 2012 - The changing "landscape" of clinical T3 prostate cancer - Session Highlights

ATLANTA, GA USA (UroToday) - This team of researchers evaluated 843 men who had radical prostatectomy for cT3 prostate cancer in the early PSA era (1987 - 1997) and 253 men in the recent ten year period (1998-2008) and evaluated differences in clinicopathologic features, recurrence-free, progression-free, and cancer-specific survival.

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